Saturday, October 26, 2019
The Cruel and Bitter Miss Havisham in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens :: Great Expectations Charles Dickens
The Cruel and Bitter Miss Havisham in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens    At one point in the novel, Dickens tells the reader that Miss.  Havisham was a wonderful, beautiful woman and is considered to be a  great match. In contrast, when the reader first meets her she is a  frightful old woman who cares about nothing but herself. She is  determined to live her life in self-pity and seek revenge on all men.  In the novel, Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, Miss Havisham is  established as a cruel and bitter old woman trapped in the past,  nearly a century ago, when she was abandoned on her wedding day, and  is now raising an adopted daughter to seek revenge on all men by  breaking their hearts however, near the end of the novel when she  converses with Pip about his love for her daughter over the years, it  is evident to her after that she has made a dreadful mistake and  changes most drastically before she dies.    "I had heard of Miss Havisham up town-everybody for miles round had  heard of Miss Havisham up town as an immensely rich and grim lady who  lived in a large and dismal house barricaded against robbers and led a  life of seclusion." Even before meeting Miss. Havisham the reader is  introduced to her and has an idea of what she is all about. Anyone who  lives secluded from society for years is going to be considered  eccentric. The town perceptibly gossips about her since everyone has  heard of her. The first time Dickens has the reader meet Miss.  Havisham is through Pip. The young boy is told to go visit her and  play and as he sees the house he describes it in bleak detail. As he  is led to Miss. Havisham through the dark halls by her daughter,  Estella, the tone of the house is set. There are cobwebs, antique  furniture, and clocks all stopped at twenty minutes to nine. Finally  Miss. Havisham is introduced. She is seen in her once white, now  yellow, wedding dress. All of this description, the old house, the  clocks, the wedding dress, explains how Miss. Havisham was left on her  wedding day many years ago and that was when her life stopped. She  even says as Pip is leaving, "There, there! I know nothing of days of  the week; I know nothing of weeks of the year. Come again after six  days. You hear?" Dickens creates the house and Miss. Havisham as a  unity. The condition and aspect of the house shows the gloom in her  mind. The way the house is dark is just fuel for her desire to seek    					  The Cruel and Bitter Miss Havisham in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens  ::  Great Expectations Charles Dickens  The Cruel and Bitter Miss Havisham in Great Expectations by Charles Dickens    At one point in the novel, Dickens tells the reader that Miss.  Havisham was a wonderful, beautiful woman and is considered to be a  great match. In contrast, when the reader first meets her she is a  frightful old woman who cares about nothing but herself. She is  determined to live her life in self-pity and seek revenge on all men.  In the novel, Great Expectations by Charles Dickens, Miss Havisham is  established as a cruel and bitter old woman trapped in the past,  nearly a century ago, when she was abandoned on her wedding day, and  is now raising an adopted daughter to seek revenge on all men by  breaking their hearts however, near the end of the novel when she  converses with Pip about his love for her daughter over the years, it  is evident to her after that she has made a dreadful mistake and  changes most drastically before she dies.    "I had heard of Miss Havisham up town-everybody for miles round had  heard of Miss Havisham up town as an immensely rich and grim lady who  lived in a large and dismal house barricaded against robbers and led a  life of seclusion." Even before meeting Miss. Havisham the reader is  introduced to her and has an idea of what she is all about. Anyone who  lives secluded from society for years is going to be considered  eccentric. The town perceptibly gossips about her since everyone has  heard of her. The first time Dickens has the reader meet Miss.  Havisham is through Pip. The young boy is told to go visit her and  play and as he sees the house he describes it in bleak detail. As he  is led to Miss. Havisham through the dark halls by her daughter,  Estella, the tone of the house is set. There are cobwebs, antique  furniture, and clocks all stopped at twenty minutes to nine. Finally  Miss. Havisham is introduced. She is seen in her once white, now  yellow, wedding dress. All of this description, the old house, the  clocks, the wedding dress, explains how Miss. Havisham was left on her  wedding day many years ago and that was when her life stopped. She  even says as Pip is leaving, "There, there! I know nothing of days of  the week; I know nothing of weeks of the year. Come again after six  days. You hear?" Dickens creates the house and Miss. Havisham as a  unity. The condition and aspect of the house shows the gloom in her  mind. The way the house is dark is just fuel for her desire to seek    					    
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